Epic_Fail

@Gros_Fail
97 Followers
226 Following
427 Posts
In the beginning was the command line. https://soutien.laquadrature.net Soutenons La Quadrature du Net ! #LQDN #AdminSys
Compte de backup: @Gros_Fail
C’est dingue, les vœux ça marche ! L’année 2025 ne commence pas trop mal avec cette bonne nouvelle de la mort de Le Pen, un raciste, un colonialiste, un facho, un tortionnaire, un assassin, un homophobe, etc… mais ça change rien au combat antifasciste unitaire à mener d’urgence.
Tiens ! J'ai un nouveau site ! Https://helloquittex.com
HelloQuitX - Let's Quit X together]

Hello Masto,

Y a t il des expertes insectes/plantes ici ?

J'ai un petit olivier qui se fait squatter par des fourmis.

Et il y a des boules/cocons/trucs noirs qui sont apparus sur les branches et le tronc.

les fourmis ont l'air de "travailler" dessus.

J'ai pensé a des nids de pucerons, pour un élevage, mais de près ça ne ressemble pas.

Si quelqu'un a une idée de ce que c'est.

(vous pouvez repouet à volonté, j ai pas trop de follower)

J'aimerais lancer une émission format podcast sur le jeu vidéo et l'actualité culturelle, avec un sous-texte anarchiste, un ton impertinent et des revendications de gauche.

Est-ce que ça vous fait penser à une émission pré-existante ?

Est-ce que vous seriez intéressés ?

Le boost/like m'aide à s'avoir si j'investis le peu d'énergie qu'il me reste ou non :p

Le domaine de premier niveau .INTERNAL est désormais réservé à des usages privés comme l'administration d'un routeur ou d'une box,
D'après une résolution du Conseil d'administration de l'ICANN
https://reseau.developpez.com/actu/361338/Le-domaine-de-premier-niveau-INTERNAL-est-desormais-reserve-a-des-usages-prives-comme-l-administration-d-un-routeur-ou-d-une-box-d-apres-une-resolution-du-Conseil-d-administration-de-l-ICANN/

Risky Business take on CrowdStrike root cause report is good.

You can see the confusion the report provides in this discussion I think, eg some of the things are talked about as being implemented - but they’re down as findings for improvement. It’s the way the report is worded, to make you believe certain things existed.. that don’t yet.

https://youtu.be/IcayaFA7OcI

- YouTube

Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube.

Ah tiens, je viens de fêter DIX ANS d'encouragements à la #TeamInsomniaque. Ils sont tous là —> https://mesencouragements.tumblr.com/page/316 (en commençant par les plus anciens, 316 pages !)
Mes encouragements à la #TeamInsomniaque

Chaque soir, un #GIF pour passer la nuit devant ton écran.

Tumblr
@mwl

When my dad – an IT professional – died, in 2009, my mom lost her on-site tech support. While I'm not a "Windows guy" (my IT life has had me working in the UNIX and Linux world), I became her tech support. The evening my dad died, I made the 3 hour trip north. As part of snuffing out the last candles of his life, I had to break into
his computers to recover all the critical files and as many credentials, or at least the sites he regularly logged into, as I could (yeah: I had to dig through the fright-show that was his browser-history). Having recovered what I could, I uploaded the critical files to her laptop and gave her the list of sites that she needed to login to or contact the owners of to attempt account-recoveries. While I was doing the file transfer, I reorganized her computer: created an admin account (that I knew the password to and demoted her account to a "regular user" account. I shared the admin password with her and showed her how to "run as administrator" when she needed to …and counseled her on the dangers of doing so. Also made sure she had a functional and up-to-date A/V package. Also showed her how she could use some collaboration-software to share her desktop to me, in case she needed help once I returned to my home.

For a boomer, my mom's surprisingly low on the tech-phobic scale. So long as she's able to write instructions down into her little notebook, she's reasonably comfortable fending for herself. While there's been hiccoughs, here and there, most have been things that could wait for holiday visits for me to do on-site tech support. Most other things yielded to phonecalls or desktop-sharing sessions.

As time passed, I got a family-plan for a password manager and, on a subequent installed it for her. Having a password manager application tied to my family-plan, it allowed me to set up a "dead man" recovery option for myself. Given her age, and not wanting to repeat the break-in I had to do against my dad's computer, that recovery-option was desirable for making a coming eventuality less of a pain in the ass. Also meant that I could easily share credentials with her (e.g., my Netflix account) in a way that allowed me to keep updating passwords without her losing access to shared services.

Similarly, I eventually got her a 2FA application and walked her through setting up 2FA on the accounts that had the capability at the time.

As she started moving her activities to her phone, she asked for help installing the password-manager and 2FA tool to her phone, both requests I obliged.

I don't want my mom to be a "Jessica". Sadly, not enough people out there have the luxury of having security-focussed tech-support in their family.